Subject: A couple possibilities, though only one is probably usable.
Author:
Posted on: 2019-11-10 20:35:41 UTC

The Al Bhed language in Final Fantasy X is a simple substitution cipher from English, so your phrase gets converted letter-for-letter into this:

"Fa yna dra lremtnah uv soneyt funmtc. Uhla fa fyhtanat mucd, pid huf fa ryja vuiht aylr udran. Fa zueh uin ryhtc eh vneahtcreb, yht po uin ryhtc fa piemt y haf funmt dukadran."

Pronounced: "FEah aenah de-raah lu-raeaym-tenah-ha oo-fu seeohneayae-te feoonm-te-ku. OO-ha-luah feah feae-ha-teahnah-te moo-ku-de, peee-de haoo-fe feah raae-jaeah fuooee-ha-te ahae-lu-ra oo-de-raahn. FEah zooeay-ha ooeen raae-ha-te-ku eay-ha funeayah-ha-te-ku-raeay-bae, ae-ha-te peoh ooeen raae-ha-te-ku feah peeeeaym-te ae haah-fe feoonm-te deoo-kukah-de-raahn."

(All above content from the translation site I linked in my first line.)

But there's also an official alphabet, which I'm amused to see has capital letters created by stretching out the lowercase letters in a Microsoft Publisher-sort of program.

My other, probably not not good idea, is, well . . . to put the phrase through this.

<_<

—doctorlit was going to include the angelic script from James Rollins's The Judas Strain, but upon looking it up again, the cipher provided in the novel gives multiple angelic characters for the same English letter, and therefore is less helpful than the Unown suggestion

Reply Return to messages